Chapter
1 III| At this cry they all three looked at one another in
2 III| and so on, till the last three or four who were left came
3 III| the~deserted studio for three or four days.~ ~Ginevra
4 III| their strained emotion. All three~looked at one another and
5 III| it is told that he made three~steps to the door of the
6 III| advising him to get~rid of three men in France on the eve
7 III| quietness and work. These three beings~loved each other
8 III| she trod. Like lovers, the three~would often sit silently
9 III| every thought. Here~were not three existences, but one,--one
10 III| hearth, divided itself into three tongues of fire. If,~occasionally,
11 III| have been, unknown to~these three despotic souls, another
12 IV | great crisis in life. All~three rose from table without
13 IV | anniversary. They were all three sitting~in Bartolomeo's
14 IV | strained as those~of the three chief actors in this scene.
15 V | Together they went through the three rooms contained in their
16 V | she cried.~ ~Above these three rooms, under the roof, was
17 V | their life~may be given in three words: THEY WERE HAPPY.
18 VI | speaking--for~the second time in three long years--of his daughter.~ ~"
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